Customers walked over the slain man’s body for about five minutes after he was shot in the doorway of the Kalamazoo store. (mlive.com)

The mother of a Michigan man shot and killed in front of a Michigan store was outraged to learn that customers continued to walk over his body for about five minutes before anyone called for help.

Jackel Wright told WWMT-TV that she recently learned of footage from a security camera inside the Quick Stop store in Kalamazoo that shows the moment her son, Jheryl Wright, was gunned down as he walked out the door in September 2012.

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But after the 24-year-old man collapsed, several customers continued to walk in and out of the store — stepping over the wounded man's body to get through the door.

Jheryl Wright, 24, was fatally shot near the front door of a Kalamazoo convenience store in September 2012.

"I just can't believe people in this world would do something like that. I can't."

Jackel Wright said she was outraged that several customers continued to walk in and out of the store — and over her dead son’s body — for several minutes until help was called. (MLIVE.com)

The shocking clip — which was released during the trial of Clarence Ross, who was convicted last week of Wright's murder — also shows the clerk continue to deal with customers even after he glances down at Wright's body.

"How can you step over someone laying in the doorway and not help?" Jackel Wright said. "How would they feel if that was one of their loved ones sitting there?"

Clarence Ross, 32, was convicted last week for the murder of Jheryl Wright in September 2012.

Wright's body was sprawled on the floor for about five minutes until a customer finally realized something was terribly wrong and called 911 on his cellphone.

The victim's mother said she has only been told about the video, because she's too distraught to watch it herself. But she said she'd like to find out the identities of every person who was in the store when her son was killed.

"I hope God have mercy on your soul, because you was wrong sitting there and not helping my son, like he was just a doormat — walking over him, laying there dead," she said. "I hope you all can't sleep at night, because that was awful, just plain awful."

Ross, 32, was found guilty of open murder, solicitation of murder and felony use of a firearm. He was slated to be sentenced on Jan. 13.